Basic Course Reformed History and Theology Georg Plasger Lesson 4 Reformed Confessionalisation in Germany and Upper Germany © 2004 Reformed online Johannes a Lasco Library http://www.reformed-online.net 1 1. Introduction 2. Martin Bucer and Strasbourg 3. Johannes a Lasco and East Friesland 4. The counties of Bentheim, Steinfurt and Tecklenburg 5. Lingen 6. Lippe 7. Rhineland and the Lower Rhine Valley 8. The Wetterau Association of Counts (Wittgenstein, Nassau-Dillenburg- Siegen, Wied) 9. Hessen-Cassel 10. The Electoral Palatinate and Baden 11. East Germany 12. Huguenots in Germany 13. Literature 2 1. Introduction In Lessons 2 and 3 of the basic course, the beginnings of the Reformed Reformation in Switzerland and Geneva were discussed (with a brief look at France). This lesson shall deal with the question of how the Reformation of Reformed character became established in individual parts of Germany. It will be seen that this was not a uniform occurrence. For one, there was the phenomenon that individual regions, which had turned in the first place to the Lutheran Reformation, became Reformed in the course of the sixteenth Century, e.g. the counties of Bentheim and Lippe or the Electoral Palatinate. Besides this, there were also regions that experienced a reformation of a Reformed character from the beginning, e.g. Upper Germany, or that initially existed as much under Lutheran as Reformed influence, e.g. the Palatinate. And there were in Germany numerous congregations of refugees (above all Huguenots and Waldenses). All this makes it difficult to grasp the entire occurrence in one concept. The suggestion, discussed a great deal around 1985, to name the whole occurrence a “second Reformation” after a first Lutheran Reformation, must be viewed as a failure. For it makes into a rule a sequence which was present in only some areas, of first Lutheran and then Reformed confessionalisation. It is therefore more fitting, with regard to Germany, to speak somewhat more diffusely of the “Reformed confessionalisation” and the history of Reformed churches and congregations in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Therefore, because of the very different ways in which the Reformed congregations originated in Germany, there are relatively many sections in this lesson standing independently of each other. They reflect the diversity but also demonstrate the complexity of the historical developments. The Reformed church was first officially acknowledged in Germany in 1648 by the Peace Treaty of Westphalia in Munster and Osnabrueck, which ended the Thirty Years’ War. Before this, there was an important event in the year of 1555. In the Religious Peace Treaty of Augsburg, two decisions were reached among others. For one, general peace was guaranteed for the members of the Augsburg Confession. For another, the so-called “ius reformandi” was confirmed. As a result, the regional rulers, counts and estates could determine 3 the confession of their country (which later arrived at the formula “cuius regio eius religio” – “he to whom the region belongs defines also the religion”). The fact that the Reformed confession was related to the Augsburg Confession gave the regional rulers who were becoming Reformed the freedom to introduce it into their areas. For the Reformed confession, confessionalisation reached from 1563 (when the Electoral Palatinate became Reformed) to the Peace Treaty of Westphalia in 1648. There, on the one hand, the same right was granted to the Reformed as to the Catholics and Lutherans. And on the other hand, the “ius reformandi” was limited so that a change of confession of the regional ruler no longer had to be followed by that of his region. 2. Martin Bucer and Strasbourg Martin Bucer and Strasbourg belong to the “History of the Reformed Church” only in certain respects. For the so-called Upper German Reformation actually embodies an independent type besides the Lutheran and Reformed. Boissard, Jean-Jacques; Bry, Theodor de: Bibliotheca chalcographica, hoc est Virtute et eruditione clarorum Virorum Imagines. Heidelberg: Clemens Ammon, 1669. Partes 1-5: 1669, S. 35 Martin Bucer (actually Butzer) was born on Nov. 11, 1491 in Schlettstadt (Alsace). 15 years old, he became a Dominican novice, studied theology in Heidelberg, left the monastery in1521 and became first a priest. Far-reaching for Bucer was his participation in Luther’s Heidelberg disputation in 1518. Since then, Bucer’s theology was shot through with the message of justification. In the years of 1521 to 1523, Bucer entered the company of Franz von Sickingen, a knight inclined to humanism, became a pastor in Landstuhl and Weissenburg, married the former nun Elisabeth Silbereisen and was excommunicated by the Bishop of Speyer in 1523 on account of the marriage and Reformation preaching. He moved to his hometown Strasbourg and was chosen to be a pastor there in 1524. He pushed ahead in unmistakable steps the Reformation that had already been introduced there (among those who worked there was Wolfgang Capito). In this way he 4 developed his own theological character, which in the same measure both joined him to Luther and separated him from him. The basic trends of the doctrine of justification are especially present in Bucer: the human cannot redeem himself – he is a sinner through and through. However, (and here Bucer makes other emphases than Luther) this does not mean that the believing human being, who knows that God’s grace alone saves him, is permitted to sit back and do nothing. Rather, the Spirit of God qualifies believers for the service of neighbour – and leads them to various reforms in the church and society. Only a few years after the beginning of his activity, at the beginning of the thirties, Bucer was already considered the most important Reformer of the Southern German towns. He became the adviser of Philip of Hesse, one of the regional rulers to be numbered among the forerunners of the Reformation in Germany. Bucer was principally interested in the uniting of the various Protestant camps. He worked intensively (and ultimately without success) on an agreement in the understanding of the Lord’s Supper between the reformers of Wittenberg and of Zurich (to whom he stood somewhat nearer). Luther did not accept Bucer’s in-between position. And further, after Bucer’s death, Zurich rejected his efforts towards unification. Luther ultimately succeeded in moving Wittenberg and the Protestant Southern German territories (which were threatened by isolation) towards a (more formal) agreement in respect of the Lord’s Supper (Agreement of Wittenberg in 1536). The result was that the Southern territories in the majority turned towards Lutheranism. Throughout his endeavours towards an inner Protestant consensus, Bucer was also engaged as a prominent figure in the so-called religious colloquies in Hagenau, Worms and Regensburg (1540/41), which had the goal of a unification of, or at least an agreement between, the Protestant and Catholic churches. These colloquies failed however. Meanwhile, Bucer continued his activity of reform in Strasbourg – and for some in Strasbourg he went too far. In 1548 Bucer had to leave Strasbourg and went to England, where he sought from Cambridge (where he did his doctorate of theology) to foster the Reformation in England. He never felt at home in England however, and died in 1551. His bones were burnt in 1557 in the context of the temporary re- Catholicisation under Queen Mary in the market square of Cambridge. Three 5 years later, however, Bucer was ceremoniously rehabilitated by Queen Elizabeth I. Two years later, a co-worker of Bucer for many years, Conrad Hubert, wrote about Bucer, “… among the faithful servants of Christ … he was in no way the least.” Bucer’s untiring dedication to the achievement of an agreement between the various camps and his ceaseless activity had effects which lasted long after his death. Bucer’s theological significance was discovered anew in the 20th Century. 3. Johannes a Lasco and East Friesland Reformation activities arose in East Friesland as early as 1520, influenced among other things by the “Devotio moderna.” Those convinced of the Reformation received support in the larger towns (Emden, Norden, Aurich and Leer) and from individual members of the chieftain nobility (the regional rulers in East Friesland were called chieftains). By means of the event of “the Oldersum Religious Colloquy” in 1526 (the themes in dispute were the mediation of Christ, the function of Mary and the doctrine of justification) Ulrich of Dornum , above all, caused a dispute between the approach to Reformation and Roman Catholic theology. A further result of the colloquy was a distinctive profile for Protestant positions in East Friesland. It is striking that the positions of the Reformation in East Friesland are in the first place reminiscent of Zwingli. Luther’s teachings, however, were felt as insufficient, particularly in respect of the doctrine of the church. In the year of 1528, the “Preachers’ Confession” arose, in which it is denied that the sacraments are the means of salvation – the authors thereby opposing Luther, whom they accuse of a lack of consistency. From the Confession of the East Friesland Preachers of 1528. Article 30 Much less does the Lord’s Supper give to a Christian the certainty that he is a Christian and has faith; rather must he have certainty before he 6 goes to the Lord’s Supper – otherwise he would be a swindler or a mocker. Article 31 Whoever does not eat and drink the flesh and blood of Christ spiritually by faith, i.e. whoever is not saturated by Christ and does not think he has enough for eternal bliss, eats and drinks the bread and the chalice of the Lord – the signs of remembrance of his flesh and blood – to his own damnation. Article 32 If you, poor man, still want first to win assurance and consolation there, then you still have no faith, which is the certainty itself.
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